Turkey inflation may have peaked

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Published May 3, 2017

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Ankara - Turkey’s core inflation eased in April, suggesting that

consumer price gains may have peaked even as the headline rate rose to the

highest since 2008.

Annual core inflation, which strips out the impact of

volatile items such as food, slowed to 9.4 percent from 9.5 percent in March,

compared with the median estimate of 9.9 percent in a Bloomberg survey of

economists. Headline inflation accelerated for a fifth month to 11.9 percent

from 11.3 percent during the same period, the state statistics office said

Wednesday the highest since 2008 and faster than economists forecast.

The unexpected drop in the core index is partly due to a

revision in Turkstat’s methodology in January, which pushed apparel prices

about 3 percentage points below historical April levels, according to Odeabank AS

economist Sakir Turan. So price dynamics may have improved earlier than

predicted, he said.

“The worst may be already behind us unless there is another

price shock, such as a plunge in the currency,” said Turan, who had

estimated an annual rate of 10 percent. “That explains the muted reaction to

the data, although the headline inflation rate was higher than expected.”

Read also:  How South Africans are dealing with inflation 

Tight Money

A deceleration in price gains could lead to a

faster-than-expected loosening of monetary policy. Governor Murat Cetinkaya has

pledged to keep money tight until the inflation outlook improves. The bank

raised the cost of funding to commercial lenders to the highest in more than

five years after the lira fell to a record in January.

The lira swung between gains and losses after the data

and was trading 0.2 percent higher at 3.5348 per dollar, close to where it was

before the inflation data came out.

Headline inflation exceeded the 11.7 percent median forecast

of economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Price climbs were led by food costs, which

rose 15.6 percent from a year earlier and 1.2 percent from March. Overall,

prices were up 1.3 percent from the previous month, Turkey’s

statistics institute said.

Last week, the central bank said it expects inflation

to accelerate in the short term before slowing in the second half of the year.

In January, the statistics office instituted an annual fixed

weight for items used to calculate price rises in clothing and food. In the

past, it allocated weights that varied monthly. The central bank said in its

April 28 inflation report that the new system was likely to drive down clothing

inflation in April and May, and push up inflation after August.

The methodology change will push the headline rate higher

during the last quarter of this year, according to Ibrahim Aksoy, a strategist

at HSBC Investment Management in Istanbul.

Following the likely peak in April, consumer price gains will be volatile

during the rest of the year and end 2017 around 9.5 percent, Aksoy said in an

emailed note.

 

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